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Pop Culture Icons to Celebrate During Halloween

9 Pop Culture Icons With Big Witch Energy I'd Like to Celebrate This Halloween

I mean no disrespect to Sabrina Spellman, but you already know she's a witch. The same goes for Willow Rosenberg, Samantha Stephens, Glinda the Good, and the Wicked Witch, to boot. But there are many less obvious and no less witchy individuals scattered throughout popular culture; icons who, when the weather turns crisp and we carve up gourds, we might miss the chance to honour for their Big Witch Energy.

And what is Big Witch Energy? It's powerful. Beautiful. Strange. It can be dark. It can be queer. It can be kind. For someone with BWE, it can carry them away, change their lives, or change the lives of others. BWE is transgressive and transformative, unboxable and undeniable. Because witches, beyond cauldrons and broomsticks, represent something joyfully, powerfully, and unrepentantly outside of the paradigm; something oppressive forces cannot understand or control, so of course they seek to hunt it out.

Today I seek not to hunt out but to celebrate. By the power of three thrice over, I present: a Big Witch Energy honour roll.

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1. Tim Curry

I considered highlighting Dr. Frank-N-Furter specifically, or Wadsworth the Butler, or his gleeful acid trip of a turn in The Worst Witch, but all this power is coming straight from the source — Tim Curry IS Big Witch Energy, personified.

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2. Mary Katherine Blackwood

The narrator of We Have Always Lived in the Castle, the final novel published by Shirley Jackson — herself an absolute BWE queen — nails books to trees and buries silver to shield herself and her sister from the cruelties of the world. The world gets in anyway, but one has to wonder how much worse it would've been without Merricat's interventions. The film adaptation stars Taissa Farmiga as Merricat, which is oh so appropriate considering how many times she's played a witch on American Horror Story.

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Edward Gorey, who died in 2000, was an illustrator, cat-lover, and drawer of circular-headed humans in myriad scenes of genteel and obscure peril and depravity. With a few delicate lines of ink, he created creeping, adorable dread, which are mandatory viewing come Halloween. See also: Charles Addams.

They don't call him Baba Yaga for nothing. Marjorie Liu already wrote the definitive case for Keanu Reeves's boundary-busting appeal, but a list of BWE icons would be incomplete without his unwavering, unstoppable, and terminally professional puppy-avenging assassin.

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Yes, that Alice! An absolute outsider who refuses to be gaslit, calls out the insanity of the world around her, and is ultimately tried and found guilty for simply naming the objective ("you're nothing but a pack of cards!") truth? I can think of nothing witchier.

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Guys, she's a witch, and she always has been, hiding in plain sight behind the glorious glow of Julie Andrews and all the Disneyfied trappings of traditional feminine beauty and grace. But make no mistake: she's brimming with BWE, moving things with her mind, slipping between dimensions, and saving Mr. Banks from the patriarchal maw of capitalism.



Kate Racculia is the author of Tuesday Mooney Talks to Ghosts: An Adventure, which is on bookshelves now.

Image Source: Everett Collection

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